Susan Antilla is an investigative journalist and author who writes about securities regulation, gender discrimination, stockbroker fraud and arbitration. She has written about business and finance for 40 years, authoring columns about Wall Street for The New York Times, Bloomberg, TheStreet and USA Today. Antilla is author of “Tales From the Boom-Boom Room: The Landmark Legal Battles That Exposed Wall Street’s Shocking Culture of Sexual Harassment.” The New York Observer called her book “a work of compelling Wall Street anthropology.”
Her articles have also appeared in The Nation, The Intercept, The American Prospect and CNN. She previously was a reporting fellow for Type Investigations, the investigative newsroom of Type Media Center.
She has appeared on PBS, CNN, CNBC and Bloomberg Television, and has been interviewed on dozens of radio programs about investor protection issues and sexual harassment.
She has won 3 “Best in Business” awards from the Society for Advancing Business Editors and Writers (SABEW) and received the Consumer Reporting award from the New York Press Club in 2016. In 2017, she received the Betty Furness Consumer Media Service Award from the Consumer Federation of America.
Antilla has a master’s degree in journalism from New York University and has taught journalism at New York University and Fairfield University.
Antilla tweets from @antillaview.
Sub-specialties:
Gender discrimination
Women on Wall Street
Investor protection
Mandatory arbitration
Finance and securities regulation
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Full list of articles, 2010 - 2022
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Full listing of articles, 2010-2014
[2010-2014] -
Forced Arbitration is Making It Harder for Low-Wage Workers to Seek Justice
Capital & Main [May 2, 2022] -
Goldman Sachs Finds No Problem with Forced Arbitration
The American Prospect [December 24, 2021] -
The Dangers of Working While Black on Wall Street
The Nation [June 21, 2021] -
Stark Lessons from Wall Street’s #MeToo Moment
The Intercept [October 7, 2019] -
Small Investors are Prey, Again, for the Wolves of Wall Street
The New York Times [September 14, 2018] -
How Secure Is Your Investment Account
Fox [September 3, 2015] -
Wall Street Makes it hard to Dig Up Dirt on Your Broker or Brokerage Firm
The Street [June 10, 2015] -
In 30 Years, Only 17 Women Won Sexual Harassment Claims Before Wall Street’s Oversight Body
The Intercept [April 18, 2018] -
Like Anita Hill vs. Clarence Thomas, Ellen Pao Lost Kleiner Perkins Gender Fight But Women Gained
The Street [March 30, 2015] -
In Push for Change, Finra Is Opposed by the Wall St. Firms It Regulates
DealB%K [January 26, 2015] -
Why the Wolf of Wall Street's 'Sucker List' Won't Be Released to 'Inside Edition'
DealB%k [July 23, 2014] -
Goldman Women Say They Make Less Than Men Who Frequent Strip Clubs, Call Them 'Bimbos'
The Street [July 1, 2014] -
Caveat Emptor, Investors: The Regulators Are Trying to Protect You
The Street [June 18, 2014] -
Women Charge Bias and Harassment in Suit Against Sterling Jewelers
New York Times [March 28, 2014] -
Is Belfort's 'Wolf' the Real Wall Street?
New York Times [March 18, 2014] -
1 in 5 Senior Citizens Fall for Financial Scams
The Street [March 17, 2014] -
Do You Really Want to Learn Investing From These Guys?
Investopedia [January 29, 2014] -
Black marks Routinely Expunged From Brokers' Records, Report Funds
New York Times [October 16, 2013]
Robin on women and climate change, murdered journalists, and male "rites of passage." Guests: Investigative journalist Susan Antilla on #MeToo vs. Wall St.; investigative journalist Kathryn Joyce on the religious adoption industry and migrant kids.